Two weeks ago I argued that the 98.6% USDC concentration running through agentic payments was the most under-discussed structural risk in the space. Ten days ago Tether and Georgia shipped the first sovereign-paired non-USD stablecoin as one possible answer. This month the European response is landing too, and it is shaped very differently.
Frankfurt-based AllUnity, a regulated European stablecoin issuer and licensed e-money institute backed by DWS, Flow Traders, and Galaxy, has confirmed the imminent launch of SEKAU — a Swedish krona stablecoin issued under the EU's Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) framework — and paired it with Agentic Payments, a settlement product built on Coinbase's x402 standard that drops AI-agent transactions directly into European local bank accounts. Both are targeted for go-live in June 2026, subject to final regulatory approvals.
SEKAU joins AllUnity's existing EURAU (euro) and CHFAU (Swiss franc) and becomes the issuer's third European currency denomination. In a market where dollar-backed tokens still hold roughly 99% of global stablecoin supply, this is now one of the larger families of regulated, MiCA-grade non-dollar alternatives in circulation.
Why MiCA Changes the Shape of the Story
The headline is the asset; the substance is the regulatory wrapper. MiCA is the first comprehensive, supranational regulatory framework for crypto assets in a major economic bloc, and it imposes a specific, prescriptive set of obligations on stablecoin issuers — sometimes called e-money tokens (EMTs) under the regime:
- 1:1 reserve backing in highly liquid assets, segregated from issuer funds.
- Redemption rights at par for holders.
- Authorisation as an e-money institution (or credit institution) in an EU member state, with passporting rights across the rest of the bloc.
- Ongoing prudential and conduct supervision, including reserve audits and disclosures.
This matters for engineers because it changes what "support a non-USD stablecoin" actually costs you in production. SEKAU is not a community-issued asset on a chain you have never heard of. It is a regulated EMT, issued by a licensed e-money institute, with defined reserve composition, defined redemption SLAs, and named supervisory authorities. From a counterparty-risk and settlement-engineering standpoint, that profile is dramatically closer to "accept SEPA Instant" than to "accept a random ERC-20."
If you have been routing through stablecoins in cross-border flows and worrying about which jurisdiction's rules apply on which leg, MiCA-grade EMTs are the cleanest stablecoin asset class to integrate today. They were designed to slot into the same legal and operational vocabulary as bank money.
Read the full article on tomcn.uk →
About the Author
I'm Tom Wang, an AI Developer & Fintech Developer — building AI agents, crypto payment infrastructure, and cross-border payout systems with Rust, Go, and TypeScript. Based in London, UK.
Currently open to new opportunities in fintech, crypto payments, and AI agent engineering.
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